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If... When would slavery have ended?

Discussion in 'History Forum' started by imported_J.R. Graves, Sep 2, 2005.

  1. Bunyon

    Bunyon New Member

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    RSR,

    So you attribute what Wilburforce did to Wilburforce and to his "receptive audience", and not to God?
     
  2. rsr

    rsr <b> 7,000 posts club</b>
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    jgrubbs said:

    "The secession wasn't over slavery, if it were, then why did the Northern states own slaves, many in the North owned and supported slavery longer than many in the South."

    You really should get your facts straight. According to the 1860 census, the North — outside of the border states — had 46 slaves (29 of them in Utah.)

    Among the border jurisdictions, slaves accounted for 2.7 percent of the population in Delaware and D.C. In the other three states, slavery was more substantial, but still far lower than in the states of the Confederacy — 20% in Kentucky, 13% in Maryland, 10% in Missouri. In all, the Northern and border states accounted for 11 percent of all the nation's slaves, almost all of them in three border states.
     
  3. rsr

    rsr <b> 7,000 posts club</b>
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    Maybe, maybe not. I'm not dogmatic about it. You could make a case either way. I do not presume to know how God works His sovereign will.

    And how do you know that God did not provide a receptive audience in some places and not in others? Did he not harden Pharoah's heart?
     
  4. JGrubbs

    JGrubbs New Member

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    It is hard to believe, but in a number of northern states free blacks had fewer rights than slaves in the South. Historian Charles Adams reports that Indiana and Ohio prohibited free Negroes from entering the state. Lincoln never spoke against the Illinois law (1853) that barred black people from residing in that state. The Oregon constitution (1859) prohibited blacks from coming into the state, holding property, making contracts or filing a lawsuit.

    Northern states that permitted black residency did not permit blacks to attend the theater or school, nor could blacks be admitted to hospitals. De Tocqueville wrote that the southern people were “much more tolerant and compassionate” toward blacks than were northerners. In 1862 the North British Review wrote that “free Negroes are treated like lepers” in the north.

    President Lincoln made it abundantly clear that the Civil War was not about slavery. He invaded the Confederacy in order to maintain the union and the revenue base for his expansionist plans.

    In 1862 Lincoln wrote a public letter to New York Tribune editor Horace Greeley: “My paramount object in this struggle is to save the Union, and is not either to save or to destroy slavery. If I could save the Union without freeing any slave, I would do it. What I do about slavery, and the colored race, I do because I believe it helps to save the Union.”

    When Lincoln declared the Emancipation Proclamation as a war time measure hoping to stir up a slave rebellion in the South (northern slaves and those in Confederate territory under Union control were not freed), Union General “Fighting Joe” Hooker wrote to Lincoln that “a large element of the army had taken sides against it, declaring that they would never have embarked in the war had they anticipated this action of the government.”

    Source: Paul Craig Roberts
     
  5. Bunyon

    Bunyon New Member

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    RSR, I am simply saying that if God was behind the ending of slavery in England, and I think he was since it was mainly the long work of a Christian with Christan motives, there would be no obsticles for him to do it here also. And you say Wilburforce had a receptive audience, but my understanding is he had to push it for decades before he was succesful. But If God did it there, he could have and would have done it here, and there would be no obsticles. Perhaps, the Civil War was not the way God would have chose to do it.
     
  6. NiteShift

    NiteShift New Member

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    A couple of points;
    Abe Lincoln was really being pragmatic in his issuance of the Proclamation. Though he was personally an opponent of slavery, he saw his main task as keeping the country together, and slavery was secondary. The Proclamation was primarily a political tool to prevent England assisting the Confederacy. Since Lincoln had officially made this a war against the institution of slavery, the English couldn't very well be seen as defending it.

    On another point, when people say that Lincoln allowed the border states to continue to keep slaves, just keep in mind that as soon as the war ended, slavery became unlawful in all parts of the country. So it's not as if the Proclamation was intended as a permanent solution, but was only a temporary fix.

    Kentucky did remain "loyal" to the Union, but that was at least partly because it was occupied so early in the war by Union troops, and the state had no choice but to remain in the Union. Actually about 40,000 Ky troops served the Confederacy.
     
  7. Bunyon

    Bunyon New Member

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    NightShift,

    You are right about that, but the slavery was still a side issue for most of the war.
     
  8. rsr

    rsr <b> 7,000 posts club</b>
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    Bunyon said:

    "RSR, I am simply saying that if God was behind the ending of slavery in England, and I think he was since it was mainly the long work of a Christian with Christan motives, there would be no obsticles for him to do it here also."

    Certainly true; but the fact is that is not the way it happened here. Whether it was by God's design, we don't know. It's certainly a possibility.

    "Perhaps, the Civil War was not the way God would have chose to do it."

    Perhaps. But that's the way it happened. The Northern abolitionists, of course, took a long time to gain any sympathy. Trouble is, the South was in control of the federal government (because of compromises made at the beginning of the Republic) up until 1860. And the Southerners were in no mood to listen to abolitionists.
     
  9. Bunyon

    Bunyon New Member

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    RSR, Well I blieve that God's hand of providence ultimately prevails, but I am sure we make him take the long way around sometimes.

    What do you think about the whole institution of slavery? i.e. Could it have been God's providence. Think Joseph [​IMG]
     
  10. rsr

    rsr <b> 7,000 posts club</b>
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    JGrubbs:

    I'm not sure that Roberts' reductionist column really has anything to do with the argument. The whole country was racist, just as most of it had been since the founding. It was in the political blood, so to speak. How otherwise to explain the treatment of blacks, Native Americans and former Mexicans?

    Lincoln's colonization scheme is, alas, a red herring. Lincoln certainly favored colonization as a pragmatic measure, but it was always on a voluntary basis. Because it was voluntary, it could not have been carried out because the vast majority of American blacks didn't want to go back to Africa. They considered this country their home.

    Did Lincoln intend to spark a slave revolt? I know of no evidence of that. The Emancipation Proclamation was intended to 1) deprive the South of the slave labor that supported the economy and 2) put Southern slaveholders on notice that they would either give up or lose their property. Incitement to rebellion was not a factor.
     
  11. rsr

    rsr <b> 7,000 posts club</b>
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    Bunyon said:

    "What do you think about the whole institution of slavery? i.e. Could it have been God's providence. Think Joseph"

    May have been. But I think it's dangerous for us mortals — as Baptist Richard Furman did — to think we can always discern providence and not mistake our own inclinations for the Will of God. In the Old Testament, God often used heathen nations as His instruments, but he did not let them escape punishment for their actions.
     
  12. Bunyon

    Bunyon New Member

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    RSR-"The whole country was racist"

    You mean the whole world was, including the Native Americans and Fromer Mexicans.
     
  13. rsr

    rsr <b> 7,000 posts club</b>
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    JGrubbs posted:

    "President Lincoln made it abundantly clear that the Civil War was not about slavery. He invaded the Confederacy in order to maintain the union and the revenue base for his expansionist plans."

    Americans of all sections were expansionist. The North wanted land for homesteaders and manufacturing, the South for plantations.

    Besides, the South fired first. (Silly, silly mistake, as many Southerners tried to tell the Confederate government.)

    "In 1862 Lincoln wrote a public letter to New York Tribune editor Horace Greeley: 'My paramount object in this struggle is to save the Union, and is not either to save or to destroy slavery. If I could save the Union without freeing any slave, I would do it. What I do about slavery, and the colored race, I do because I believe it helps to save the Union.' "

    I didn't know this was in dispute.
     
  14. Bunyon

    Bunyon New Member

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    RSR- Well even in Joseph's case He said, "what was meant for evil, God used for good". Think about it. All of Africa is a war torn, disease ridden, mostly pagan, back water. If it was not for the peace of the American pie now possesed by the decendants of the slaves, blacks would have no real voice of power in the world. I do have a point, and it is not to justify our inclinations, i'll share momentarily.
     
  15. rsr

    rsr <b> 7,000 posts club</b>
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    Some cultures were more suspectible than others. Europeans seemed particularly prone to it, possibly because of their technical superiority during the era of discovery. Of course, it was not unknown elsewhere. The Chinese were convinced of their cultural superiority. The Japanese were indeed racist, which made for a really nasty encounter with racist Americans.

    I would not overgeneralize about Native Americans; many of them seemed more concerned about culture rather than race and readily adopted outsiders. There are, in fact, many cultures that seem oblivious to what we call "race."
     
  16. rsr

    rsr <b> 7,000 posts club</b>
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    Bunyon said:

    "Think about it. All of Africa is a war torn, disease ridden, mostly pagan, back water. If it was not for the peace of the American pie now possesed by the decendants of the slaves, blacks would have no real voice of power in the world. I do have a point, and it is not to justify our inclinations, i'll share momentarily."

    You can make that case. But I'm not sure we as mortals are competent to think we are doing the Will of God in such situations.

    A thousand years ago, most of Europe was disease ridden, pagan influenced, war torn and a backwater of civilization. And the Muslims took them as slaves. Forgive me if I don't feel kindly toward such treatment and do not wish it upon others.
     
  17. Bunyon

    Bunyon New Member

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    I doubt if there are any cultures that are or were oblvious to race except in our romanticized version of them. I read of an account by a man in Silver City NM during the Wild West days of indians who mauraded and killed men women and children on verious settlements and hung the victims on meat hooks. It really upset our idealized notions about Native Americans when one professor produced irrefutable evidence that the Pueblos of the south west were cannibalistic.
     
  18. Bunyon

    Bunyon New Member

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    RSR - I would not say we were doing God's will, but rather God's will was doing us. ;)
     
  19. rsr

    rsr <b> 7,000 posts club</b>
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    "I doubt if there are any cultures that are or were oblvious to race exept in our romanticized version of them."

    To be sure, romanticization is a malady of the modern world. I blame Rousseau and his silly idea of the "noble savage," which writers like Cooper perpetuated. However, I think it is clear that some cultures are more prone to racism than are others. This often arises — on both sides — when one group is technically far superior than another.

    "I read of an account by a man in Silver City NM during the Wild West days of indians who mauraded and killed men women and children on verious settlements and hung the victims on meat hooks."

    And European Americans did much the same thing.

    "It really upset our idealized notions about Native Americans when one professor produced irrefutable evidence that the Pueblos of the south west were cannibalistic."

    Well, this is upsetting. Idealized notions about any group of people — including our own — are prone to be upset by looking at how people actually behave.

    On a further note, I know of the evidence for cannibalism in the Pueblos. On the other hand, the cannibalism of the Donner Party — and of European sailors in the late middle ages and early modern era — is equally well established.
     
  20. rsr

    rsr <b> 7,000 posts club</b>
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    OK. I just think it's dangerous for us to try to justify our evil actions by proposing that either we are doing the Will of God or God is acting through us.
     
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